Regulation, Federalism, and Interstate CommerceOelgeschlager, Gunn and Hain, 1981 - 167 sider |
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Side 133
... things out . Why do you think that the American states , if left to their own devices , could work these things out , when sovereign countries have had such extraordinary difficulties ? Kitch : A common market package , a creation of ...
... things out . Why do you think that the American states , if left to their own devices , could work these things out , when sovereign countries have had such extraordinary difficulties ? Kitch : A common market package , a creation of ...
Side 152
... things as local as possible . And if experience does show that , as I think it is now doing , then there will be pressure for Congress to act less . North : What model or what mechanism do you have for running that result down in your ...
... things as local as possible . And if experience does show that , as I think it is now doing , then there will be pressure for Congress to act less . North : What model or what mechanism do you have for running that result down in your ...
Side 153
... things that are now going on in the federal govern- ment , such as its inability to control its own rate of monetary creation , its inability to control its own rate of expenditure growth , and its development of regulatory regimes that ...
... things that are now going on in the federal govern- ment , such as its inability to control its own rate of monetary creation , its inability to control its own rate of expenditure growth , and its development of regulatory regimes that ...
Innhold
IntroductionA Dan Tarlock | 3 |
Why Has Federal Power Increased at the Expense | 5 |
Regulation and the American Common | 9 |
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agencies American common market argued argument Articles of Confederation authority Bank barriers Carolina central Commerce Clause doctrine Commission common market competition conflict Congress constitutional law corporations Court held decentralized decisions discrimination duties economic effect efficiency example federal government federal level federal power federal regulation federal system Federalist foreign free rider problem free trade George Stigler Gibbons going Graglia important impose incentives interest group internal trade interstate commerce Interstate Compact issues Jersey judicial jurisdiction Justice Kitch Kitch's paper lawyers legislature limited Marshall Maryland ment merce Murray Weidenbaum national market negative Commerce Clause Pennsylvania period political problem prohibit protectionism public choice Public choice theory question Railroad rates regulatory restrictions result role Sam Peltzman Shreveport Rate South Carolina standards statute substantive due process Supreme Court Taney tariff Texas theory tion transactions costs uniform United Weidenbaum York